Abstract   Purpose   Background   The Study   Discussion   Conclusion  

Abstract

My study was created to see if the proportion of recycling in Cleveland, Ohio was significantly lower than the proportion of recycling in Portland, Oregon. On the website, http://www.dorsetforyou.com/index.jsp?articleid=387050, I have found that the recycling centers in Portland, Oregon show an average recycling rate of 70%. Before doing my study, I did background research on previous recycling studies. I found many studies on recycling, such as: significance tests to see how different programs affected amount of recycling, a significance test to analyze how an implemented program affected Wisconsin’s residential recycling, a study to measure the resources saved through recycling, and a study to assess different factors associated with recycling and recycling rates for different ages and genders. When conducting my study, I called each recycling center and had them randomly ask 10 people at the 31 different centers in the city of Cleveland if they recycle all of their recyclable materials at home. Two of the 33 recycling centers that I randomly selected to sample from were disconnected or no longer in business. The data that I collected showed an average recycling rate of 173 out of 310 people, or 55.8%, for everyone asked at each center combined. When I ran a one proportion z-test on the data that I collected, I obtained a p-value of 0, so I rejected the null hypothesis that the proportion of Cleveland’s recycling is equal to 0.7, accepting the alternative hypothesis that the proportion of Cleveland’s recycling is less than 0.7.  I was still surprised, yet pleased, to see that my sample of Cleveland recycling centers showed a rate of over 50%.